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RIVERBANK ARMY AMMUNITION PLANT

EPA #: CA7210020759

State: California(CA)

County: Stanislaus

City: 10 miles northeast of Modesto

Congressional District: 18

Other Names: NI Industries Inc. Riverbank Plt

Bulletin Board

Description and History

NPL Listing History

NPL Status: Final

Proposed Date: 06/24/88

Final Date: 02/21/90

Deleted Date:

The 173-acre Riverbank Army Ammunition Plant site has been used to manufacture materials, including cartridge cases, grenades, and projectiles, since 1951. The site comprises the 145-acre main facility and four unlined industrial waste treatment ponds in the flood plain of the Stanislaus River, located approximately 1 1/2 miles north of the main facility. In 1942, the Aluminum Company of America built the site plant as an aluminum reduction facility to supply the military. The plant closed in 1944 and reopened in 1951, with Norris Industries, Inc. as the operating contractor. The plant was identified for closure under the 2005 Base Realignment and Closure round. As of 2010, the U.S. Army is negotiating property transfer conditions with the City of Riverbank. As a result of industrial activities, the site has generated corrosive wastes, solvents, and wastewater containing heavy metals. Chromium and cyanide have been released onto the property and have subsequently leached into the groundwater, and over the years the contaminant plumes have migrated beyond the installation boundary. In addition, a variety of waste and debris were burned or disposed of on the ground surface and in trenches in a landfill area at the facility. Studies also have determined that sediments in the waste treatment ponds contain elevated levels of zinc. Overflows from the ponds have dumped into the Stanislaus River, and the river has occasionally overflowed into the ponds during periods of flooding. Approximately 13,700 people obtain drinking water from public and private wells within 3 miles of the site, and at least 3,500 acres of nut and fruit orchards are irrigated partially by groundwater. The Stanislaus River is used for irrigation and recreational activities.

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Contaminants and Risks

Contaminated Media:

Groundwater

Groundwater

Surface Water

Surface Water

Soil and Sludges

Soil and Sludges

Environmentally Sensitive Area

Environmentally
Sensitive Area

Groundwater is contaminated with chromium and cyanide. Soils in the landfill are contaminated with chromium and arsenic. Sediments in the industrial waste treatment ponds contain zinc and petroleum. Potential human health threats include drinking contaminated groundwater and showering or bathing with the water, and accidentally coming into contact with or ingesting contaminated soils from the landfill or sediments from the ponds. Potential ecological threats include exposure of local land-dwelling and migratory species to contaminated soils from the landfill and to sediments from the ponds.

Who is Involved


This site is being addressed through Federal actions.

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Investigation and Cleanup Activities

This site is being addressed in two stages: immediate actions and a long-term remedial phase focusing on cleanup of the entire site.

Initial Actions
Immediate Actions: When chromium was found in off-site domestic water wells in 1989, the Army supplied affected residents with bottled water. The Army subsequently closed the contaminated wells and replaced them with new deeper, clean wells. The Army completed an interim groundwater treatment system that became fully operational in October 1991. This system treats chromium and cyanide contaminants from extracted groundwater. In 1991, the Army began work to extend the existing City of Riverbank's public water supply system to all residents who have been, or could potentially be, affected by the contaminated groundwater. By December 1992, the residents were connected to the Riverbank water system. In 1993, the Army removed petroleum and zinc-contaminated sediments from its industrial waste treatment ponds and disposed of the sediments off-site. Groundwater around the ponds is monitored quarterly as a requirement in the National Pollution Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) permit for the ponds.

Remedy Design

Remedy Design
Entire Site: A remedy was selected in the spring of 1994 that includes a comprehensive groundwater extraction and treatment system for the contaminated groundwater; stabilization, capping, and monitoring of the landfill; and no further cleanup action for the ponds, which were cleaned up through the immediate actions described above. The Army completed its design of the landfill cap in late 1994. Design and construction of the groundwater extraction and treatment system were completed in November 1996.

Remedy Ongoing

Cleanup Ongoing
Groundwater Extraction and Treatment. The groundwater extraction system and treatment plant is in operations and maintenance (O&M) mode. The groundwater treatment plant and extraction wells are monitored daily. Groundwater treatment influent is sampled monthly. Groundwater from certain monitoring wells are sampled quarterly. A quarterly groundwater report is submitted to the regulatory agencies.

    Cleanup Complete

    Cleanup Complete
    Evaporation Ponds. A removal action of the contaminated soil was completed in December 1993. A Record of Decision (ROD) signed in March 1994 documented no further action for the evaporation ponds.

    Landfill. Construction of the landfill cap was completed in November 1995. Routine landfill O&M such as mowing and weed control, occasional revegetation, minor erosion and drainage repair is continues.


    The Riverbank Army Ammunition Plant is participating in the Installation Restoration Program, a specially funded program established by the Department of Defense (DOD) in 1978 to identify, investigate, and clean up petroleum and hazardous contaminants at DOD facilities. In April 1990, the Army, the EPA, and the State of California signed a Federal Facility Agreement, which established a procedural framework and schedule for the Army to carry out the necessary site cleanup actions.

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    Cleanup Results to Date

    Graph image

    Treating and monitoring the groundwater, and disposing of contaminated sediments have reduced the potential for exposure while final cleanup activities are being planned at the Riverbank Army Ammunition Plant site. The second Five-Year Review (FYR) for the Riverbank Army Ammunition Plant (RBAAP) in Riverbank, California was completed in September 2006. The RBAAP is now officially on the Base Realignment and Closure (BRAC) list.

    Overall, the groundwater extraction and treatment system and landfill cover remedial actions are functioning as designed and are operated and maintained in an appropriate manner. A few issues that do not immediately impact the protectiveness of the remedy were noted during the second FYR process. A summary form identifying these issues can be found in the second FYR in the Documents and Reports section below.

    Appropriate health and safety and emergency response protocols are in place at the RBAAP facility and are being implemented properly to control risks. The landfill and the groundwater remedial actions are operating as designed and are protective of human health and the environment. Protection of human health and the environment through the landfill and groundwater remedial actions at RBAAP are discussed in more detail in the second FYR below.

    The Army has implemented, maintained and enforced land use controls [LUCs] / institutional controls [ICs] consistent with the selected remedial actions in the 1994 Record of Decision for the Riverbank Army Ammunition Plant. To address the comments on the Draft second FYR related to LUC [IC] issues and
    as previously planned, the Army will develop an Explanation of Significant Differences (ESD) to the 1994 Record of Decision to address all relevant and necessary LUCs [ICs] associated with the RBAAP remedial actions as described in the ROD and/or with the existing RCRA Permit. Details regarding the LUCs / ICs implemented, maintained, and enforced are presented in Section X of the second FYR below.

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    Potentially Responsible Parties


    Potentially responsible parties (PRPs) refers to companies that are potentially responsible for generating, transporting, or disposing of the hazardous waste found at the site.


    Online information about the PRPs for the site is not yet available.

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    Documents and Reports

    Hide details for Records of DecisionRecords of Decision
    03/23/94Record of Decision
    Hide details for Technical DocumentsTechnical Documents
    09/24/01Five Five Year Review Report
    09/22/06Second Five Year Review Report

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    Community Involvement

    Public Meetings:

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    Public Information Repositories

    File cabinet

    The most complete collection of documents
    is the official EPA site file, maintained at
    the following location:

    Superfund Records Center

    Mail Stop SFD-7C

    95 Hawthorne Street, Room 403

    San Francisco, CA 94105

    (415) 820-4700

    Enter main lobby of 75 Hawthorne street,
    go to 4th floor of South Wing Annex.

    The public information repositories for
    the site are at the following locations:

    Stanislaus County Library, Riverbank Branch, 3442 Santa Fe Street, Riverbank, CA 95367

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    Additional Links

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    Contacts

    Name Phone Number Email Address
    EPA Site Manager Lewis Mitani 415-972-3032 Mitani.Lewis@epa.gov Mail Code SFD83
    75 Hawthorne Street
    San Francisco, CA 94105
    EPA Community
    Involvement Coordinator
    Vicki Rosen 415-972-3244
    1-800-231-3075
    Rosen.Vicki@epa.gov Mail Code SFD63
    75 Hawthorne Street
    San Francisco, CA 94105
    EPA Public Information
    Center
    415-947-8701 r9.info@epa.gov
    State Contact Jim Pinasco





    Marcus Pierce
    916-255-3719





    916-464-4733
    JPinasco@dtsc.ca.gov





    mpierce@waterboards.ca.gov
    California Department of Toxic Substances Control, 8800 Cal Center Drive,
    Sacramento, CA 95826-3200

    California Water Board
    Central Valley Region
    11020 Sun Center Drive,
    Suite 200,
    Rancho Cordova, CA 95670
    PRP Contact
    Community Contact
    Other Contacts
    After Hours
    (Emergency Response)

    US EPA

    (800) 424-8802

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